Feminism and the absolution of sin
Why does feminism absolve women of their sins? Why are female rapists and abusers simply erased from existence?
Why does feminism absolve women of their sins? Why are female rapists and abusers simply erased from existence?
AVfM publishes here an essay that was apparently too incendiary for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Read it and tell us why you think they wouldn’t publish it. We think we know why.
Is anyone, male or female, truly “strong and independent?” John Ribner takes on this mentality, especially as it pertains to today’s cliche of the “strong, independent woman.”
Are we done beating this horse? No, not til it’s dead.
October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month. As she did last year, Dr, Tara Palmatier of shrink4men.com will be sharing a daily post with readers aimed at increasing awareness of the untold part of the domestic violence issue: Abused men. Each personal story reveals one person’s tragedy, and the series reveals the tragedy of how poorly this society reactions to abused men.
The idea that men require civilizing is long-lived. Peter Wright proposes a novel suggestion for how we might achieve that: by leaving men alone to be the caring and for the most part civil creatures they were from before society decided to impose its will on them.
Social Justice Warriors, usually with “the plight of women” their harmless-sounding agenda, are pretty ugly when exposed to light.
The head of the Bank of England things promoting women automatically leads to better performance. Mike Buchanan begs to differ.
One of the most closed-minded, sycophantic, and aggressively ignorant reactionaries working for big-monied feminism is Mychal Denzel Smith. But with a little editing help, Janet Bloomfield is pretty sure she can help turn him around.
Rapper Deniro Farrar has released his ode to the single mothers of Black America’s community. Mumia Ali thinks it’s very illuminating, but not necessarily in the way some people think.